Unscramble the Blue Letters

Narrator: We have you here today sfepcliacliy to try and learn a little bit about how the brain processes vuaisl illusions.
Wei Ji Ma: My name is Wei Ji Ma. I'm a professor of neuroscience and psychology at New York University.
WJM: Our research focuses mostly on perception and decision-making. What's out there in the world, the brain has no idea, but it's trying to do its best to figure it out. And even though that process is pretty sasethopiticd, sometimes it goes wrong.
(glsasbrakes).
The first step is that light enters your eyes. Just from the table or from the coffee cup, you get an image in your eye, but the hard work only srtats after that. Very often, the incoming signals are not complete and they're not perfect, and your brain has to make sense of them. There are cases where this icneernfe process goes wrong, and that's when you have a visual iosliuln.

Open Cloze

Narrator: We have you here today ____________ to try and learn a little bit about how the brain processes ______ illusions.
Wei Ji Ma: My name is Wei Ji Ma. I'm a professor of neuroscience and psychology at New York University.
WJM: Our research focuses mostly on perception and decision-making. What's out there in the world, the brain has no idea, but it's trying to do its best to figure it out. And even though that process is pretty _____________, sometimes it goes wrong.
(___________).
The first step is that light enters your eyes. Just from the table or from the coffee cup, you get an image in your eye, but the hard work only ______ after that. Very often, the incoming signals are not complete and they're not perfect, and your brain has to make sense of them. There are cases where this _________ process goes wrong, and that's when you have a visual ________.

Solution

illusion

sophisticated

breaks

specifically

visual

starts

inference

glass

Original Text

Narrator: We have you here today specifically to try and learn a little bit about how the brain processes visual illusions.
Wei Ji Ma: My name is Wei Ji Ma. I'm a professor of neuroscience and psychology at New York University.
WJM: Our research focuses mostly on perception and decision-making. What's out there in the world, the brain has no idea, but it's trying to do its best to figure it out. And even though that process is pretty sophisticated, sometimes it goes wrong.
(Glass breaks).
The first step is that light enters your eyes. Just from the table or from the coffee cup, you get an image in your eye, but the hard work only starts after that. Very often, the incoming signals are not complete and they're not perfect, and your brain has to make sense of them. There are cases where this inference process goes wrong, and that's when you have a visual illusion.